Thursday, May 23, 2013

Woolwich attack: how the media get it wrong | The truth about welfare | Duncan Smith to face grilling over stats abuse

New Statesman  

Weekly Online
Newsletter
23 May 2013

HOME EDITOR'S CHOICE ECONOMICS POLITICS WORLD AFFAIRS BLOGS JOBS SUBSCRIBE


If you were forwarded this by a colleague please click here to subscribe


Editor's Choice

Five must-read pieces from the magazine

  1. After Woolwich: how the media got it wrong and how the public can get it right
    Too many titles handed the killers the megaphone they craved. Those who quietly reject the offer of hatred and division deserve to be heard too.
    By Sunder Katwala

  2. Woolwich deserves better than the attention of murderers and EDL racists
    An eyewitness account from last night's disturbances in south east London.
    By Daniel Trilling

  3. Duncan Smith to face grilling from MPs over misuse of statistics
    The work and pensions select committee launches an inquiry after Duncan Smith was rebuked. By George Eaton

  4. Why ministers shouldn't celebrate today's migration figures
    With a dramatic fall in the number of international students, the government's policy 'success' has come at a considerable economic cost. By Sarah Mulley

  5. The transition from DLA to PIP will harm disabled claimants
    Causes for concern from a care worker. By Erin Mee

Five must-read blogs

  1. The truth about welfare
    The system is broken and the government is making it worse. By Ian Mulheirn

  2. Our big fat fear
    As our waistlines have grown, so has our collective prejudice against the overweight. How should we handle the obesity epidemic? By Felicity Cloake

  3. This is the most authentic clichéd, mock-Italiano ristorante I've dined in for ages
    Real Meals: Bella Italia. By Will Self

  4. Why women's bodies can't do anything right
    Enviable curves v skinny self-control. By Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett

  5. The Great Reckoning: Why the European ideal is under threat
    The certainties that sustained notions of European unity and social solidarity are collapsing.
    By Mark Mazower

Subscribe!

The issue is on sale now, or you can subscribe through the website.

Special Offer

Subscribe today and receive 12 issues for just £1 each. Plus receive a free copy of Hung Together: The Cameron-Clegg Coalition worth £10!

Subscribe today for the following benefits:

  • Save £125 on the annual cover price!
  • Never miss an issue
  • The magazine will be delivered to your door each week - sent by first class mail or airmail
  • Free access to the PDF edition (worth £50 a year)
  • Money back guarantee - we will send you a full refund on the unexpired part of your subscription should you decide you don't want to receive any more issues
  • Free access to the New Statesman archive
  • Subscription continues for £14.99 at quarterly intervals, unless cancelled, for one year. Then £9.99 a month thereafter.


Sponsored Advertorial

The business of social business
What works and how it's done- In association with IBM


 
Search thousands of top-quality jobs, click here
Sign up to New Statesman Jobs


 





Kindly note that if you receive this e-mail your e-mail address is being held by us for the purpose of communicating with you on New Statesman related matters. If you do not wish us to e- mail you, please unsubscribe from this list. New Statesman Limited is a Data Controller for the purposes of the Data Protection Act 1998. © New Statesman Ltd. 2009. The above information may be privileged. If you are not the intended recipient of this email please destroy it. As Internet communications are not secure please note that the New Statesman does not accept legal responsibility for the content of this email message.

No comments:

Post a Comment